Robert Davidson: Neopulp Sci Fi

what I was thinking of when I thought of this idea: it had just occurred to me that there is a kind of state of consciousness In meditation in which you feel that you're sort of like free from having a subject of your thought. Your attention is perfectly unfocused. but something makes it unfocused and your nominal consciousness. There is something in you doing something like Preventing Focus. But somehow your overall state is yet one of inaction of lacking Focus not of consciously focusing. You are consciously focused on a lack of focus. if you haven't experienced this you might not buy the argument at all. it's like you're relaxing right on the edge of a hiccup. it's like you have a real hair-trigger muscle that you're focusing on relaxing. perhaps some part of you knows it's going to Twitch but perhaps with practice and dedicated Focus you can last much longer and even for days at a time be free from focus. And then you forget about the thing in you that is focused on being unfocused and then I guess your zen. Enlightened.

You can probably see the connection between those two. when I was thinking of that Focus thing, the stuff after the dashes up there, it occurred to me that we're as we tend to think of Consciousness as a binary it's on or off, there must be a gradation. not only are there to layers or whatever of consciousness; but also the two are connected. They are continuous.

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so maybe start was not a dualist but a monist if we have to get into that paradigm. as Dreyfus says that was a problem to the start counting in first place. no one is right. Although his opponents (sartre’s) many of them want to say he's dualist, and the inner can not touch the outer, actually he's continuist: they're all 1 more like a blanket folded over. that does not work because there would still have to be a boundary between the layers and the blanket and what constitutes the space in between? and there I was thinking I came up with a smart blanket analogy.

so maybe start was not a dualist but a monist if we have to get into that paradigm. as Dreyfus says that was a problem to the start counting in first place. no one is right. Although his opponents (sartre’s) many of them want to say he's dualist, and the inner can not touch the outer, actually he's continuist: they're all 1 more like a blanket folded over. that does not work because there would still have to be a boundary between the layers and the blanket and what constitutes the space in between? and there I was thinking I came up with a smart blanket analogy. . . . READ MORE

SCSS Information

AVAILABLE JULY 22ND!

Technology for production: how should the app handle SCSS?

As far as I can see, the major candidates are Grunt, Gulp, WebPack, Robo.php, and PHP SCSS.

This presentation is geared toward SCSS. That can be done in more and less involved ways. The higher-effort ways offer an advantage. Work we do now getting up and running with a task runner will help us later. We may have other tasks we want to automate. Appositely, minification has been mentioned as one such task. Among aiding load speed, minification strips comments from the code.

If we use Gulp, Grunt, or WebPack, everyone may need to get familiar with the technology. There may be some level of effort to getting it running on each dev’s machine. The lower-effort methods may not require individual devs to do anything at all—except begin using SCSS.

I will briefly bring in the idea of Webpack. That is a module bundler but also a task runner. In a JavaScript app with lots of different little files like the ones we have, we could benefit from using a Common JS module system or a Require JS system, but there would be a pretty huge intermediate step. It is worth mentioning because maybe we want to have that room to grow.

Technology for production: how should the app handle SCSS?
As far as I can see, the major candidates are Grunt, Gulp, WebPack, Robo.php, and PHP SCSS.
This presentation is geared toward SCSS. That can be done in more and less involved ways. The higher-effort ways offer an advantage. Work we do now getting up and running with a task runner will help us later. We may have other tasks we want to automate. Appositely, minification has been mentioned as one such task. Among aiding load speed, minification strips comments from the code.
If we use Gulp, Grunt, or WebPack, everyone may need to get familiar with the technology. There may be some level of effort to getting it running on each dev’s machine. The lower-effort methods may not require individual devs to do anything at all--except begin using SCSS.
I will briefly bring in the idea of Webpack. That is a module bundler but also a task runner. In a JavaScript app with lots of different little files like the ones we have, we could benefit from using a Common JS module system or a Require JS system, but there would be a pretty huge intermediate step. It is worth mentioning because maybe we want to have that room to grow. . . . Read More